Los Angeles Times

Formal ambition versus feeling

- — Robert Abele

One of the most striking elements of Santo Domingobor­n Nelson Carlo De Los Santos Arias’ “Cocote,” a story of loss, religion and family ties, is the tension between its art-film ambitions and freely felt human emotions.

City-dwelling Alberto (Vicente Santos), a nondescrip­t gardener for a wealthy family, is drawn home to deal with his father’s death at the hands of a powerful local gangster (Pepe Sierra) but finds his evangelica­l Christian ways butting up against his family’s traditiona­l grieving rituals, which include wailing, animal killings and their belief that he must avenge his dad’s murder.

Hopscotchi­ng between boxy and wide aspect ratios, color palettes and between scenes impression­istic in their details and those direct in their conversati­onal expressive­ness, De Los Santos Arias finds plenty of arresting unpredicta­bility. But instead of the movie’s formal and informal sides asserting each other in a tug of war between the head and heart — a natural concept through which to dramatize someone struggling with personal mourning and culturally pressurize­d vengeance — the collision feels impenetrab­le and haphazard.

Just when Alberto’s situation begins to feel palpably fraught, the filmmaker’s aesthetics pull you away when they should deepen the crisis.

For some moviegoers, this might make for an invigorati­ng style exercise: Does a self-conscious 360-degree pan better capture Alberto’s state of mind, or a fiercely argued exchange between him and his sister? But that’s more the side effect of a movie that prefers to be willfully enigmatic than fully engaged. “Cocote.” In Spanish with English subtitles. Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 46 minutes. Playing: Laemmle Music Hall, Beverly Hills.

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